INDEX TO VOLUMES I-XXII

[For Index to the Letters, see pp. 469-507 of this Volume.]


“A birdie with a yellow bill,” xiv. 23

“A child should always say what’s true,” xiv. 5

Additional Memories and Portraits, xvi. 155

Additional Poems, xiv. 259

“Adela, Adela, Adela Chart,” xiv. 276

Admiral Guinea, xv. 145

Advertisement of “Moral Emblems,” Edition de Luxe, xxii. (end)

Advertisement of “Moral Emblems,” Second Collection, xxii. (end)

Advertisement of “The Graver and the Pen,” xxii. (end)

Æs Triplex, ii. 358

“All night long, and every night,” xiv. 4

“All round the house is the jet-black night,” xiv. 28

“All the names I know from nurse,” xiv. 46

“A lover of the moorland bare,” xiv. 74

Alpine Diversions, xxii. 248

Alps, The Stimulation of the, xxii., 252

Amateur Emigrant, The: Part I., From the Clyde to Sandy Hook: The Second Cabin, ii. 7; Early Impressions, ii. 15; Steerage Scenes, ii. 24; Steerage Types, ii. 32; The Sick Man, ii. 43; The Stowaways, ii. 53; Personal Experiences and Review, ii. 66; New York, ii. 77. Part II., Across the Plains: Notes by the Way to Council Bluffs, ii. 93; The Emigrant Train, ii. 107; The Plain of Nebraska, ii. 115; The Desert of Wyoming, ii. 119; Fellow Passengers, ii. 124; Despised Races, ii. 129; To the Golden Gates, ii. 133

“A mile an’ a bittock, a mile or twa,” xiv. 110

A naked house, a naked moor,” xiv. 71

Antwerp to Boom, i. 7

“A picture-frame for you to fill,” xiv. 74

Apology, An, for Idlers, ii. 334

Appeal, An, to the Clergy of the Church of Scotland, xxii. 199

“As from the house your mother sees,” xiv. 59

“As the single pang of the blow, when the metal is mingled well,” xiv. 254

“At evening when the lamp is lit,” xiv. 36

Autumn Effect, An, xxii. 112


Back to the World, i. 120

Bagster’s “Pilgrim’s Progress,” xxii. 186

Balfour, David, xi. 1

Ballads, xiv. 139

Ballantrae, The Master of, xii. 5; its genesis, xvi. 341

Beach, The, of Falesá: A South Sea Bridal, xvii. 193; The Ban, xvii. 206; The Missionary, xvii. 228; Devil-work, xvii. 240; Night in the Bush, xvii. 258; The Bottle Imp, xvii. 277; The Isle of Voices, xvii. 311

Beau Austin, xv. 91

Beggars, xvi. 190

“Berried brake and reedy island,” xiv. 226

“Birds all the sunny day,” xiv. 44

Black Arrow, The: Prologue, viii. 7; Book I. The Two Lads, viii. 25; Book II. The Moat House, viii. 83; Book III. My Lord Foxham, viii. 123; Book IV. The Disguise, viii. 165; Book V. Crookback, viii. 217

Black Canyon, Advertisement of, xxii. (end)

Black Canyon or Wild Adventures in the Far West, xxii. (end)

“Blame me not that this epistle,” xiv. 261

“Blows the wind to-day, and the sun and the rain are flying,” xiv. 257

Boarders, The, i. 195

Body-snatcher, The, iii. 277

Books which have Influenced Me, xvi. 272

Bottle Imp, The, xvii. 275

“Brave lads in olden musical centuries,” xiv. 270

“Bright is the ring of words,” xiv. 227

“Bring the comb and play upon it,” xiv. 15

Builder’s Doom, The, xxii. (end)

Burns, Robert, Some Aspects of, iii. 43

“By Lyne and Tyne, by Thames and Tees,” xiv. 133


Calton Hill, Edinburgh, i. 314

Camisards, The Country of the, i. 211

Camp, A, in the Dark, i. 167

Catriona: Part I. The Lord Advocate, xi. 7; Part II. Father and Daughter, xi. 203

Changed Times, i. 99

Character, A, xxii. 37

Character, The, of Dogs, ix. 105

Charity Bazaar, The, xxii. 213

Charles of Orleans, iii. 171

Cheylard and Luc, i. 177

Chief of our aunts, not only I,” xiv. 56

“Children, you are very little,” xiv. 18

Child’s Garden, A, of Verses, xiv. 1

Child’s Play, ii. 394

Christmas at Sea, xiv. 207

Christmas Sermon, A, xvi. 306

Cockermouth and Keswick, xxii. 80

College Magazine, A, ix. 36

College Memories, Some, ix. 19

College Papers: Edinburgh Students in 1824, xxii. 41; The Modern Student considered generally, xxii. 45; Debating Societies, xxii. 53; The Philosophy of Umbrellas, xxii. 58; The Philosophy of Nomenclature, xxii. 63

“Come up here, O dusty feet,” xiv. 24

Compiègne, At, i. 94

Crabbed Age and Youth, ii. 321

Criticisms: Lord Lytton’s “Fables in Song,” xxii. 171; Salvini’s “Macbeth,” xxii. 180; Bagster’s “Pilgrim’s Progress,” xxii. 186


“Dark brown is the river,” xiv. 10

Davos in Winter, xxii. 241

Davos Press, The, xxii. (end)

Day, The, after To-morrow, xvi. 279

Deacon Brodie, or the Double Life, xv. 1

“Dear Andrew, with the brindled hair,” xiv. 79

“Dear Thamson class, whaure’er I gang,” xiv. 121

“Dear Uncle Jim, this garden ground,” xiv. 50

Debating Societies, xxii. 53

“Do you remember—can we e’er forget?” xiv. 242

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Strange Case of, v. 227

Donkey, the Pack, and the Pack Saddle, i. 143

“Down by a shining water well,” xiv. 32

Dreams, A Chapter on, xvi. 177

Dynamiter, The: Prologue of the Cigar Divan, v. 7; Challoner’s Adventure, v. 15; Somerset’s Adventure, v. 73; Desborough’s Adventure, v. 149; Epilogue of the Cigar Divan, v. 212


Ebb-Tide, The: Note by Mr. Lloyd Osbourne, xix. 3; Part I. The Trio, xix. 7; Part II. The Quartette, xix. 81

Edinburgh: Picturesque Notes, i. 269; Introductory, i. 271

Edinburgh Students in 1824, xxii. 41

Education, The, of an Engineer, xvi. 167

El Dorado, ii. 368

Engineers, Records of a Family of, xvi. 3

English Admirals, The, ii. 372

Enjoyment, The, of Unpleasant Places, xxii. 103

Epilogue to An Inland Voyage, i. 122

Episodes in the Story of a Mine, ii. 254

Essays of Travel: Davos in Winter, xxii. 241; Health and Mountains, xxii. 244; Alpine Diversions, xxii. 248; The Stimulation of the Alps, xxii. 252

“Even in the bluest noonday of July,” xiv. 77

“Every night my prayers I say,” xiv. 13


Fables: The Persons of the Tale, xxi. 269; The Sinking Ship, xxi. 272; The Two Matches, xxi. 274; The Sick Man and the Fireman, xxi. 275; The Devil and the Inn-keeper, xxi. 276; The Penitent, xxi. 277; The Yellow Paint, xxi. 277; The House of Eld, xxi. 280; The Four Reformers, xxi. 286; The Man and His Friend, xxi. 287; The Reader, xxi. 287; The Citizen and the Traveller, xxi. 288; The Distinguished Stranger, xxi. 289; The Cart-horses and the Saddle-horse, xxi. 290; The Tadpole and the Frog, xxi. 291; Something in it, xxi. 291; Faith, Half-faith, and No Faith at all, xxi. 295; The Touchstone, xxi. 297; The Poor Thing, xxi. 304; The Song of the Morrow, xxi. 310

Falling in Love, On, ii. 302

Familiar Studies of Men and Books: Preface by Way of Criticism, iii. 5; Victor Hugo’s Romances, iii. 19; Some Aspects of Robert Burns, iii. 43; Walt Whitman, iii. 77; Henry David Thoreau: His Character and Opinions, iii. 101; Yoshida-Torajiro, iii. 129; François Villon, Student, Poet, and Housebreaker, iii. 142; Charles of Orleans, iii. 171; Samuel Pepys, iii. 206; John Knox and his Relations to Women, iii. 230

“Far from the loud sea beaches,” xiv. 72

“Far have you come, my lady, from the town,” xiv. 263

“Farewell, fair day and fading light,” xiv. 233

Farewell, Modestine! i. 253

“Far ’yont amang the years to be,” xiv. 105

“Faster than fairies, faster than witches,” xiv. 24

Father Apollinaris, i. 183

Father Damien: An Open Letter to the Rev. Dr. Hyde of Honolulu, xvi. 315

Feast, The, of Famine; Marquesan Manners, xiv. 167; The Priest’s Vigil, xiv. 169; The Lovers, xiv. 172; The Feast, xiv. 176; The Raid, xiv. 182; Notes, xiv. 213

Fife, The Coast of, xvi. 155

“Figure me to yourself, I pray,” xiv. 268

Fleeming Jenkin, Memoir of, ix. 165

Florac, i. 234

Fontainebleau: Village Communities of Painters, xvi. 215

Footnote, A, to History: Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa: The Elements of Discord, I. Native, xvii. 5; II. Foreign, xvii. 15; The Sorrows of Laupepa, xvii. 27; Brandeis, xvii. 53; The Battle of Matautu, xvii. 70; Last Exploits of Becker, xvii. 83; The Samoan Camps, xvii. 103; Affairs of Laulii and Fangalii, xvii. 112; “Furor Consularis,” xvii. 128; The Hurricane, xvii. 142; Laupepa and Mataafa, xvii. 156

Foreigner, The, at Home, ix. 7

Forest Notes, xxii. 142

“For love of lovely words, and for the sake,” xiv. 97

“Forth from her land to mine she goes,” xiv. 239

“Frae nirly, nippin’, Eas’lan’ breeze,” xiv. 106

“Friend, in my mountain-side demesne,” xiv. 73

“From breakfast on all through the day,” xiv. 12


Genesis, The, of “The Master of Ballantrae,” xvi. 341

“Give to me the life I love,” xiv. 219

“God, if this were enough,” xiv. 234

“Go, little book, and wish to all,” xiv. 67

Gossip, A, on a Novel of Dumas’s, ix. 124

Gossip, A, on Romance, ix. 134

Goulet, Across the, i. 203

Graver, The, and the Pen, xxii. (end)

“Great is the sun, and wide he goes,” xiv. 46

Great North Road, The, xxi. 203

Green Donkey Driver, The, i. 149

Greyfriars, Edinburgh, i. 298


Health and Mountains, xxii. 244

Heart of the Country, The, i. 7

Heather Ale: A Galloway Legend, xiv. 201; Notes, xiv. 215

Heathercat, xxi. 177

“He hears with gladdened heart the thunder,” xiv. 233

“Here all is sunny, and when the truant gull,” xiv. 97

“Here, from the forelands of the tideless sea,” xiv. 273

“Home no more home to me, whither must I wander?” xiv. 229

“How do you like to go up in a swing?” xiv. 22

Hugo’s, Victor, Romances, iii. 19

Human Life, Reflections and Remarks on, xvi. 354

Humble Remonstrance, A, ix. 148

Hunter’s Family, The, ii. 230


“I am a kind of farthing dip,” xiv. 95

Ideal House, The, xvi. 370

“If I have faltered more or less,” xiv. 86

“If two may read aright,” xiv. 55

“I have a goad,” i. 158

“I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me,” xiv. 12

“I have trod the upward and the downward slope,” xiv. 233

“I heard the pulse of the besieging sea,” xiv. 244

“I knew a silver head was bright beyond compare,” xiv. 240

“I knew thee strong and quiet like the hills,” xiv. 232

“I know not how it is with you,” xiv. 225

“In all the grove, nor stream nor bird,” xiv. 249

“In ancient tales, O friend, thy spirit dwelt,” xiv. 80

“In dreams unhappy I behold you stand,” xiv. 221

Inland Voyage, An, i. 7; Epilogue to, i. 122

“In mony a foreign pairt I’ve been,” xiv. 125

“In rigorous hours, when down the iron lane,” xiv. 230

“In the belovèd hour that ushers day,” xiv. 231

“In the highlands, in the country places,” xiv. 228

“In the other gardens,” xiv. 49

Introduction, by Andrew Lang, to the Swanston Edition, i. ix.

“In winter I get up at night,” xiv. 3

“I read, dear friend, in your dear face,” xiv. 85

“I saw you toss the kites on high,” xiv. 16

“I should like to rise and go,” xiv. 7

“I sit and wait a pair of oars,” xiv. 78

Island Nights’ Entertainments, xvii. 193

Isle, The, of Voices, xvii. 311

“It is not yours, O mother, to complain,” xiv. 90

“It is the season now to go,” xiv. 70

“It is very nice to think,” xiv. 4

“It’s an owercome sooth for age an’ youth,” xiv. 135

“It’s rainin’. Weet’s the gairden sod,” xiv. 116

“It’s strange that God should fash to frame,” xiv. 120

“I was a barren tree before,” xiv. 276

“I will make you brooches and toys for your delight,” xiv. 225

“I woke before the morning, I was happy all the day,” xiv. 14


Juvenilia, and other Papers, xxii. 3


Kidnapped, x. 77

Knox, John, and his Relations to Women, iii. 230


La Fère, of Cursed Memory, i. 79

Landrecies, At, i. 46

Lantern-Bearers, The, xvi. 200

Last Day, The, i. 248

“Last, to the chamber where I lie,” xiv. 28

“Late in the nicht in bed I lay,” xiv. 129

“Late lies the wintry sun a-bed,” xiv. 25

Later Essays, xvi. 215

Lay Morals, xvi. 379

Legends, Edinburgh, i. 291

“Let Beauty awake in the morn from beautiful dreams,” xiv. 224

“Let now your soul in this substantial world,” xiv. 255

Letter to a Young Gentleman who proposes to embrace the Career of Art, xvi. 290

Letters from Samoa, xviii. 351

“Let us, who part like brothers part like bards,” xvi. 245

“Light foot and tight foot,” xiv. 277

Light-keeper, The, xxii. 217

“Little Indian, Sioux or Crow,” xiv. 19

Lodging, A, for the Night, iv. 227

“Long must elapse ere you behold again,” xiv. 241

Lord Lytton’s “Fables in Song,” xxii. 171

Lozère, Across the, i. 213


Macaire, xv. 205

Manse, The, ix. 61

Markheim, viii. 273

Martial Elegy, A, for some Lead Soldiers, xxii. (end)

Master, The, of Ballantrae, xii. 5; its genesis, xvi. 341

Maubeuge, At, i. 21

Memoirs of an Islet, ix. 68

Memories and Portraits, ix. 7; Additional Memories and Portraits, xvi. 155

Merry Men, The, xxi. 69

Mimente, In the Valley of the, i. 237

Monks, The, i. 188

Montvert, Pont de, i. 218

Moral Emblems, xxii. (end)

Moral Emblems: Second Collection, xxii. (end)

Morality, The, of the Profession of Letters, xvi. 260

More New Arabian Nights, v. 7

Mountain Town, A, in France, i. 257

Movements of Young Children, Notes on the, xxii. 97

Moy, Down the Oise to, i. 74

“My bed is like a little boat,” xiv. 21

“My body which my dungeon is,” xiv. 98

“My bonny man, the warld, it’s true,” xiv. 118

My First Book, “Treasure Island,” xvi. 331

“‘My house,’ I say. But hark to the sunny doves,” xiv. 98

“My tea is nearly ready and the sun has left the sky,” xiv. 2


New Arabian Nights, iv. 3; More New Arabian Nights, v. 7

New Form of Intermittent Light for Lighthouses, xxii. 220

New Town, Edinburgh: Town and Country, i. 305

Nicholson, John, The Misadventures of, x. 3

Nomenclature, The Philosophy of, xxii. 63

“Noo lyart leaves blaw ower the green,” xiv. 265

Note, A, on Realism, xvi. 234

Notes and Essays, chiefly of the Road: A Retrospect, xxii. 71; Cockermouth and Keswick, xxii. 80; Roads, xxii. 90; Notes on the Movements of Young Children, xxii. 97; On the Enjoyment of Unpleasant Places, xxii. 103; An Autumn Effect, xxii. 112; A Winter’s Walk in Carrick and Galloway, xxii. 132; Forest Notes, xxii. 142

Not I, and other Poems, xxii. (end)

“Not yet, my soul, these friendly fields desert,” xiv. 89

“Nous n’irons plus au bois,” xiv. 263

Noyon Cathedral, i. 86

Nuits Blanches, xxii. 27

Nurses, xxii. 34


“Of a’ the ills that flesh can fear,” xiv. 131

“Of his pitiable transformation,” xiv. 263

“Of speckled eggs, the birdie sings,” xiv. 9

“Of where or how, I nothing know,” xiv. 267

Oise, The, in Flood, i. 55; Down the Oise to Moy, i. 74; Through the Golden Valley, i. 84; To Compiègne, i. 91 Church Interiors, i. 105

“O it’s I that am the captain of a tidy little ship,” xiv. 32

“O, I wad like to ken—to the beggar-wife says I,” xiv. 116

“O mother, lay your hand on my brow,” xiv. 92

Olalla, xxi. 127

Old Mortality, ix. 26

Old Scots Gardener, An, ix. 46

Old Town, Edinburgh: The Lands, i. 278

“Once only by the garden gate,” xiv. 220

“On the great streams the ships may go,” xiv. 68

Ordered South, ii. 345

Origny Sainte-Benoîte: A By-Day, i. 62; The Company at Table, i. 68

Our Lady of the Snows, i. 181

“Out of the sun, out of the blast,” xiv. 87

“Over the borders, a sin without pardon,” xiv. 17


Pacific Capitals, The Old and New: Monterey, ii. 141; San Francisco, ii. 159

Pan’s Pipes, ii. 415

Parliament Close, Edinburgh, i. 285

Pastoral, ix. 53

Pavilion on the Links, The: Tells how I camped in Graden Sea-wood, and beheld a Light in the Pavilion, iv. 167; Tells of the Nocturnal Landing from the Yacht, iv. 174; Tells how I became Acquainted with my Wife, iv. 180; Tells in what a Startling Manner I learned that I was not alone in Graden Sea-wood, iv. 189; Tells of an Interview between Northmour, Clara, and myself, iv. 197; Tells of my Introduction to the Tall Man, iv. 202; Tells how a Word was cried through the Pavilion Window, iv. 208; Tells the last of the Tall Man, iv. 214; Tells how Northmour carried out his Threat, iv. 221

“Peace and her huge invasion to these shores,” xiv. 93

Penny Plain and Twopence Coloured, xi. 116

Pentland Hills, To the, Edinburgh, i. 327

Pentland Rising, The: The Causes of the Revolt, xxii. 3; The Beginning, xxii. 6; The March of the Rebels, xxii. 8; Rullion Green, xxii. 13; A Record of Blood, xxii. 17

Pepys, Samuel, iii. 206

Pines, A Night among the, i. 206

“Plain as the glistering planets shine,” xiv. 223

Plea, A, for Gas Lamps, ii. 420

Pont-sur-Sambre: We are Pedlars, i. 31; The Travelling Merchant, i. 36

Portraits, Some, by Raeburn, ii. 385

Prayers written for Family Use at Vailima, xvi. 431

Précy and the Marionnettes, i. 111

Prince Otto: Book I. Prince Errant, vii. 7; Book II. Of Love and Politics, vii. 49; Book III. Fortunate Misfortune, vii. 171

Providence and the Guitar, iv. 273

Pulvis et Umbra, xvi. 299


Raeburn, Some Portraits, by, ii. 385

Rajah’s Diamond, The: Story of the Bandbox, iv. 86; Story of the Young Man in Holy Orders, iv. 111; The Story of the House with the Green Blinds, iv. 127; The Adventure of Prince Florizel and a Detective, iv. 159

Random Memories: I. The Coast of Fife, xvi. 155; II. The Education of an Engineer, xvi. 167; Rosa quo Locorum, xvi. 345

Realism, A Note on, xvi. 234

Records of a Family of Engineers, xvi. 3

Reflections and Remarks on Human Life, xvi. 354

“Resign the rhapsody, the dream,” xiv. 236

Retrospect, A, xxii. 71

Roads, xxii. 90

Robin and Ben, or the Pirate and the Apothecary, xxii. (end)

Rosa quo Locorum, xvi. 345

Royal Sport Nautique, The, i. 16


St. Ives, xx. 3

Salvini’s “Macbeth,” xxii. 180

Sambre and Oise Canal: Canal Boats, i. 50

Sambre Canalised, On the: To Quartes, i. 26; To Landrecies, i. 41

Satirist, The, xxii. 25

“Say not of me that weakly I declined,” xiv. 99

Scots Gardener, An old, ix. 46

Sea-Fogs, The, ii. 239

“She rested by the Broken Brook,” xiv. 222

Silverado Squatters, The, ii. 173; In the Valley: 1, Calistoga, ii. 179; 2, The Petrified Forest, ii. 184; 3, Napa Wine, ii. 188; 4, The Scot Abroad, ii. 194. —With the Children of Israel: 1, To Introduce Mr. Kelmar, ii. 201; 2, First Impressions of Silverado, ii. 205; 3, The Return, ii. 215

“Since I am sworn to live my life,” xiv. 263

“Since long ago, a child at home,” xiv. 237

“Sing clearlier, Muse, or evermore be still,” xiv. 96

“Sing me a song of a lad that is gone,” xiv. 256

Sire de Malétroit’s Door, The, iv. 250

Sketches: The Satirist, xxii. 25; Nuits Blanches, xxii. 27; The Wreath of Immortelles, xxii. 30; Nurses, xxii. 34; A Character, xxii. 37

“Smooth it slides upon its travel,” xiv. 23

“Some day soon this rhyming volume, if you learn with proper speed,” xiv. 58

Songs of Travel, xiv. 217

Song, The, of Rahéro: A Legend of Tahiti, xiv. 139; The Slaying of Támatéa, xiv. 139; The Venging of Támatéa, xiv. 148; Rahéro, xiv. 159; Notes, xiv. 211

“Son of my woman’s body, you go, to the drum and fife,” xiv. 227

South Seas, In the: Part I. The Marquesas.—An Island Landfall, xviii. 5; Making Friends, xviii. 12; The Maroon, xviii. 21; Death, xviii. 28; Depopulation, xviii. 36; Chiefs and Tapus, xviii. 44; Hatiheu, xviii. 53; The Port of Entry, xviii. 61; The House of Temoana, xviii. 69; A Portrait and a Story, xviii. 77; Long Pig—A Cannibal High Place, xviii. 85; The Story of a Plantation, xviii. 95; Characters, xviii. 105; In a Cannibal Valley, xviii. 112; The Two Chiefs of Atuona, xviii, 119. Part II. The Paumotus.—The Dangerous Archipelago—Atolls at a Distance, xviii. 129; Fakarava: An Atoll at Hand, xviii. 137; A House to Let in a Low Island, xviii. 146; Traits and Sects in the Paumotus, xviii. 155; A Paumotuan Funeral, xviii. 165; Graveyard Stories, xviii. 170. Part III. The Eight Islands.—The Kona Coast, xviii. 187; A Ride in the Forest, xviii. 197; The City of Refuge, xviii. 203; Koahumanu, xviii. 209; The Lepers of Kona, xviii. 215. Part IV. The Gilberts.—Butaritari, xviii. 223; The Four Brothers, xviii. 229; Around Our House, xviii. 237; A Tale of a Tapu, xviii. 247, 255; The Five Days’ Festival, xviii. 265; Husband and Wife, xviii. 278. Part V. The Gilberts—Apemama.—The King of Apemama: The Royal Trader, xviii. 289; Foundation of Equator Town, xviii. 298; The Palace of Many Women, xviii. 306; Equator Town and the Palace, xviii. 313; King and Commons, xviii. 321; Devil-work, xviii. 320; The King of Apemama, xviii. 342

Squatting, The Act of, ii. 221

Starry Drive, A, ii. 250

Stevenson at Play: Introduction by Lloyd Osbourne, xxii. 259; War Correspondence from Stevenson’s Note-book, xxii. 263

Stevenson, Thomas, ix. 75

Story, The, of a Lie, xxi. 3

Student, The Modern, considered generally, xxii. 45

Suicide Club, The, iv. 3; Story of the Young Man with the Cream Tarts, iv. 5; The Story of the Physician and the Saratoga Trunk, iv. 37; The Adventure of the Hansom Cabs, iv. 65

“Summer fading, winter comes,” xiv. 33


Talk and Talkers: I., ix. 81; II., ix. 94

Tarn, In the Valley of the, i. 224

Technical Elements, Some, of Style in Literature, xvi. 241

“The bed was made, the room was fit,” xiv. 96

“The clinkum-clank o’ Sabbath bells,” xiv. 111

“The coach is at the door at last,” xiv. 26

“Thee, Mackintosh, artificer of light,” xiv. 273

“The embers of the day are red,” xiv. 257

“The friendly cow, all red and white,” xiv. 16

“The ganger walked with willing foot,” xiv. 67

“The gardener does not love to talk,” xiv. 49

“The infinite shining heavens,” xiv. 222

“The jolly English Yellowboy,” xiv. 274

“The lamps now glitter down the street,” xiv. 37

“The lights from the parlour and kitchen shone out,” xiv. 14

“The Lord Himsel’ in former days,” xiv. 123

“The moon has a face like the clock in the hall,” xiv. 22

“The morning drum-call on my eager ear,” xiv. 233

“The pleasant river gushes,” xiv. 272

“The rain is raining all around,” xiv. 5

“The red room with the giant bed,” xiv. 56

Thermal Influence of Forests, xxii. 225

“The Silver Ship, my King—that was her name,” xiv. 238

“The stormy evening closes now in vain,” xiv. 230

“The sun is not a-bed when I,” xiv. 20

“The tropics vanish, and meseems that I,” xiv. 243

“The unfathomable sea, and time, and tears,” xiv. 75

“These nuts, that I keep in the back of the nest,” xiv. 34

“The world is so full of a number of things,” xiv. 16

“The year runs through her phases; rain and sun,” xiv. 82

Thoreau, Henry David: His Character and Opinions, iii. 101

Thrawn Janet, v. 305

“Three of us afloat in the meadow by the swing,” xiv. 6

“Through all the pleasant meadow side,” xiv. 26

Ticonderoga: A Legend of the West Islands, xiv. 187; The Saying of the Name, xiv. 189; The Seeking of the Name, xiv. 194; The Place of the Name, xiv. 196; Notes, xiv. 214

Toils and Pleasures, ii. 264

Toll House, The, ii. 245

“To see the infinite pity of this place,” xiv. 240

“To the heart of youth the world is a highway side,” xiv. 221

“To you, let snow and roses,” xiv. 224

Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes, i. 141

Treasure Island— Part I. The Old Buccaneer, vi. 9; Part II. The Sea-Cook, vi. 49; Part III. My Shore Adventure, vi. 87; Part IV. The Stockade, vi. 109; Part V. My Sea Adventure, vi. 145; Part VI. Captain Silver, vi. 185; My First Book, xvi. 331

Treasure, The, of Franchard, vi. 267

“Trusty, dusky, vivid, true,” xiv. 235

Truth of Intercourse, ii. 311


Umbrellas, The Philosophy of, xxii. 58

“Under the wide and starry sky,” xiv. 86

Underwoods: I. In English, xiv. 67; II. In Scots, xiv. 105

“Up into the cherry-tree,” xiv. 6

Upper Gévaudan, i. 165, 201


Velay, i. 141

Villa Quarters, Edinburgh, i. 311

Villon, François: Student, Poet, and Housebreaker, iii. 142

Virginibus Puerisque, I., ii. 281; II., ii. 292; On Falling in Love, ii. 302; Truth of Intercourse, ii. 311; Crabbed Age and Youth, ii. 321; An Apology for Idlers, ii. 334; Ordered South, ii. 345; Æs Triplex, ii. 358; El Dorado, ii. 368; The English Admirals, ii. 372; Some Portraits by Raeburn, ii. 385; Child’s Play, ii. 394; Walking Tours, ii. 406; Pan’s Pipes, ii. 415; A Plea for Gas Lamps, ii. 420


Walking Tours, ii. 406

Walt Whitman, iii. 77

War Correspondence from Stevenson’s Note-book, xxii. 263

“We built a ship upon the stairs,” xiv. 9

Weir of Hermiston, xix. 159; Sir Sidney Colvin’s Note, xix. 284; Glossary of Scots Words, xix. 297

“We see you as we see a face,” xiv. 85

“We travelled in the print of olden wars,” xiv. 96

“We uncommiserate pass into the night,” xiv. 255

“What are you able to build with your blocks?” xiv. 35

“When aince Aprile has fairly come,” xiv. 109

“When at home alone I sit,” xiv. 38

“When children are playing alone on the green,” xiv. 31

“When chitterin’ cauld the day sail daw,” xiv. 275

“Whenever Auntie moves around,” xiv. 11

“Whenever the moon and stars are set,” xiv. 7

“When I am grown to man’s estate,” xiv. 9

“When I was sick and lay a-bed,” xiv. 11

“When the bright lamp is carried in,” xiv. 27

“When the golden day is done,” xiv. 43

“When the grass was closely mown,” xiv. 47

“Where the bells peal far at sea,” xiv. 84

“Who comes to-night? We ope the doors in vain,” xiv. 83

Willebrock Canal, On the, i. 11

Will o’ the Mill, vi. 235

Winter and New Year, Edinburgh, i. 320

Winter’s Walk, A, in Carrick and Galloway, xxii. 132

“With half a heart I wander here,” xiv. 94

Wreath, The, of Immortelles, xxii. 30

Wrecker, The: Prologue, xiii. 5; The Yarn, xiii. 19; Epilogue, xiii. 427

Wrong Box, The, vii. 219


“Yet, O stricken heart, remember, O remember,” xiv. 93

Yoshida-Torajiro, iii. 129

Young Chevalier, The, xxi. 253

“Youth now flees on feathered foot,” xiv. 76

“You, too, my mother, read my rhymes,” xiv. 55


THE END.

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